The agriculture ministry confirmed the fourth case of swine fever in
the town of Paju, near the border with North Korea, after reporting
the county's third case late on Monday.
Since South Korea's first outbreak of African swine fever was
discovered on Sept. 17, more than 15,000 pigs have been culled,
according to data from the agriculture ministry, or about 0.1% of
the country's pig population of 12.3 million pigs.
South Korea, Asia's fourth-largest economy, has raised its animal
disease alert to the highest level following the outbreak and ramped
up disinfection measures to try to keep the virus from spreading
further.
Kim Hyeon-soo, the country's agriculture minister, said, however,
that South Korea's quarantine controls had not been strong enough.
He said the government has imposed a transport ban for pig farms
across the country for 48 hours from Tuesday noon (0300 GMT), but
might lengthen the ban.
Kim also said the country would increase disinfection efforts in
areas bordering North Korea, including in zones controlled by the
military.
African swine fever was first discovered in North Korea in May, and
it has continued spreading there as well, a South Korean lawmaker
said on Tuesday, despite the impoverished country's efforts to cull
pigs and ban distribution of pork.
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After North Korea's first outbreak of the highly contagious virus
four months ago, it imported disinfectants from overseas, but it has
not been able to contain the disease, the lawmaker, Lee Eun-jae,
told reporters after being briefed on the matter by the South's spy
agency on Tuesday.
In North Korea, which faces chronic food shortages, swine fever has
killed all pigs in North Pyongan province, the Yonhap News Agency
reported, citing South Korea's intelligence agency.
South Korea has yet to determine how or from where African swine
fever entered the country, although it is conducting an
investigation. It has also proposed to work together with North
Korea to keep the virus from spreading in both countries, but
Pyongyang has no responded yet, according to the Unification
Ministry in South Korea.
African swine fever, nearly 100% fatal to pigs though not harmful to
humans, has spread throughout Asia - including to both Koreas and to
Vietnam, Laos and the Philippines - since first being detected in
China in mid-2018, resulting in large-scale culls and lower output
of pork.
(Reporting by Jane Chung and Ju-min Park; Additional reporting by
Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Tom Hogue)
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